Think the man-eating lions of Tsavo are a hot attraction at the Field Museum?

Try the “Man in the Mirror.”

Museum visitors today were captivated by an ancient artifact tucked in a corner of the “Inside Ancient Egypt” permanent exhibit: a more than 3,000-year-old bust of a woman with an uncanny resemblance to dead pop star Michael Jackson.

“I saw it, and I’m like, ‘Oh My God, it looks like him,’” said Angel Tapia, 11, a day camper on a field trip with about 40 fellow campers. “I can’t even express it.”

Tapia described himself as a “huge, huge Michael Jackson fan” and agreed with his counselor’s blunt assessment of the bust: creepy, but exciting.

“It’s just really weird,” counselor Rosemary Dominguez said.

The bust, which dates from 1550 to 1050 B.C., might just be the world’s oldest Michael Jackson impersonator.